"Kristine Kathryn Rusch - The Questing Mind" - читать интересную книгу автора (Rusch Kristine Kathryn)KRISTINE KATHRYN RUSCH
THE QUESTING MIND Maybe you can help out--it seems there ought to be a good punch line to the question "What did the editor say to the former editor?" Any good lines escape me. The reality is that when I speak with Kris Rusch lately, l mention to her how busy I am ... and she laughs knowingly. Then I realized that her SF novel Alien Influences and her mainstream novel Hitler's Angel came out within months of ench other, and I learned that the manuscript for Victory, the fifth and final volume of "The Fey" series, requites a team and a half of paper and I think that laugh of hers is more than just knowing. It's almost ominous. Fortunately, Kris is not too busy to send an occasional tale out way ... He tries to remember. The nurses don't understand that. They think it odd that he requests audio tapes of the books he has written, videos of the interviews he has given, and photograph albums of times past. The nurses also give him three-d moving pictures of his last few years, pictures so tiny they rest in the palm of his hand. In them, the people turn like toy dolls, but he cannot feel their feet against his skin. Outside the door, he hears the nurses whispering, "Sad old man. He's got nothing left to live for, so he lives in his past." Only he doesn't have any memories except inconsequential ones: the runny eggs he had for breakfast, the plot of the crime drama he watched the night before on the wide screen television placed at the perfect distance from his bed. He has a sheet written about someone else: J. REED BRASHER, novelist, playwright, and essayist, born 1920 in Camden, New Jersey to physician Paul Brasher and his wife Mary. Published his first novel, Golden Sunset, in 1945. Wrote sixteen Broadway plays, including the Tony Award winning Stations in the Sky (1960). Published five books of essays, the last an autobiographical sketch. Married Olive Franklin in 1942, fathered two daughters, Mary and Paula. List of publications (including all 55 novels) follows. But the memories are gone, stolen an incident at a time. He had noticed the first one missing on his ninetieth birthday when his daughter, Paula, asked him to recite her favorite bedtime story to his great-grandson. He did not remember telling bedtime stories, and said so. She reminded him of that only this morning, when he asked what day she first noticed his memory slipping. "It's normal, Dad. The mind goes with age." But not his mind. His mind has controlled his entire life. He knows that with the same certainty with which he knows he is male. He remembers the feeling of control, but he does not remember the incidents that triggered it. It is the ultimate curse. His body is now so feeble that he cannot spend much time out of bed. If he does, the nurses come after him as if he were a child. |
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